On 2015-05-01 10:09:46, John Found wrote: > (...) > On the one hand, increasing the width, you are increasing the use of the > screen area which is good. > On the other hand, the readability of the plain text articles decreases for > very wide texts. > > Anyway, for the purposes of source code management, the screen use is more > important, so I removed > the max-width and now the paper will occupy the whole screen.
By giving the user the control over the width of the rendered page back by making it a function of the browser's client width, the user can easily adjust the width of the browser for prose reading, often with a single keystroke (e.g. on windows, win+{left,right}, for me on awesome it mostly is one keystroke, sometimes two, depending on my active tags etc., but I digress). This is more user-friendly than deciding an optimal reading width for them (that may or may not pay attention to user-styles, user-selected fonts, one of the ways a document can be scaled on the user-end, etc.), so here's a tip to the hat for you: *. Thanks & Regards, -Martin _______________________________________________ fossil-users mailing list fossil-users@lists.fossil-scm.org http://lists.fossil-scm.org:8080/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/fossil-users